Dollars and sense: In the NBA, money is exploding

CHARLOTTE, NC - JUNE 23: NBA Commissioner Adam Silver speaks to the media as Charlotte Hornets announce the 2017 All-Star game at the Time Warner Cable Arena on June 23, 2015 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images)

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July 15, 2015

LAS VEGAS (AP) To understand how the business model of NBA salaries is unlike ever before, consider the cases of Reggie Jackson, Khris Middleton and DeMarre Carroll.

They're not All-Stars.

They're not exactly household names, either.

Nonetheless, the trio got a combined $210 million in deals this summer: Jackson got $80 million over five years from the Detroit Pistons, Middleton a five-year, $70 million deal to stay with the Milwaukee Bucks, and Carroll a four-year contract worth nearly $60 million to join the Toronto Raptors.

Only a couple years ago, such deals would have been considered baffling. These days, they seem quite fair.

Thanks to a $24 billion television deal that kicks in before the 2016-17 season, already skyrocketing salaries will soon reach a new stratosphere. It's hard to fathom that a league that dealt with serious labor strife four years ago and might be looking at another work stoppage in a couple years is about to become flush with so much cash.

''One of the things we're learning is that there is so much that's unpredictable when the cap is moving so dramatically as it did - as it will next year and the year after that,'' NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. ''We're continuing to study how our system is absorbing the money.''

Despite all the contract riches, Silver offers a major word of caution - the NBA still insists that plenty of teams are losing money.

''A significant number of teams are continuing to lose money and they continue to lose money because their expenses exceed their revenue,'' Silver said.

And yet to many, the riches seem richer than ever. The salary cap for this coming season was supposed to rise considerably to $67 million; it went even higher, to $70 million. The salary cap for the 2016-17 season might be $90 million. For the season after that, maybe $110 million or more.

These days, players that might not have been considered stars are getting what would recently have been star-level deals. John Wall - one of the league's elite point guards - of the Washington Wizards aired his complaints earlier this week.

''I'm getting the same as Reggie Jackson,'' he lamented, as quoted by CSN Washington.

Wall, a two-time All-Star, is going into the second year of a five-year, $85 million deal. Jackson cashed in after averaging nearly 18 points in 27 games with Detroit this past season, a breakout that followed 3 1/2 seasons of largely unheralded work.

''That new CBA kicked in at the right time,'' Wall said.

Sure, but it seems like all players are reaping benefits. Under the current CBA, player salaries are supposed to make up about 50.4 percent of the league's basketball-related income. This past season, income grew more than anticipated and that meant the league wrote a check to the National Basketball Players Association to cover the difference - roughly $57 million.

Silver thinks that might look like peanuts next year.

''We could be writing a check moving close to half a billion dollars to the players association,'' Silver said. ''That's not of course the ideal outcome from our standpoint. ... It's happened because the revenue we generated was much higher than we had ever modeled. But we're also learning that when you have all that money coming into the system, team behavior isn't necessarily predictable either.''

The numbers right now are huge, which is giving some within the game hope that the league and the union - which can opt out of the current collective bargaining agreement in two years - can avoid any more interruptions in play.

Anthony Davis got locked up by the New Orleans Pelicans for $145 million over the next five years. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers will make $23 million this season; he could earn more than $30 million in 2016-17 if he, as would seem likely, opts out once again.

Next summer, Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunder is the expected headliner of the free-agent class, and his contract could easily set records. Just think what Stephen Curry - the league's reigning MVP and leader of the NBA champion Golden State Warriors - will make when he's a free agent again in 2017.

Some scoffed when he signed a $44 million, four-year deal in 2013. Curry seems like the biggest bargain in the game now.

''I've never seen anything like it,'' New York Knicks general manager Steve Mills said, when asked about how contract values keep soaring. ''Obviously, it changes what happens with the league.''

The growth has been steady in recent years, though now the climb seems to be much steeper. In 2011, the average annual value of new free-agent contracts was about $5 million. So far this year, it's flirting with the $10 million mark.

Whiteside will make just under $1 million this season. Next summer, it wouldn't be surprising if he landed a deal with a total worth of $80 million or more.

''Can't think about it,'' Whiteside said. ''It's hard to process. I just worry about what I can control.''

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